PoolLeakFix • DIY Leak Testing
How to Do a Bucket Test for Pool Leaks (Step-by-Step)
The bucket test answers one question fast:
is your pool losing water faster than evaporation alone?
You don’t need special tools—just a bucket, a marker/tape, and 24 hours.
If your pool drops more than the bucket in the same conditions, treat it like leak behavior and move to the next step.
Start here: pick the closest match and jump to the right lane.
Choose your lane
- Just tell me the fastest correct setup
- I have an autofill (and I’m worried it’s hiding the loss)
- Should the pump be on or off during the test?
- I run a spa spillover / fountains / heater — how do I test that?
- How to read results without overthinking it
- My pool dropped more than the bucket — what now?
Lane A: The fastest correct setup
If you only do one version, do this. It gives you the cleanest “leak vs evaporation” signal.
- Turn OFF autofill for the entire test.
- Fill pool to normal level (mid-skimmer / typical tile line).
- Fill bucket ~3/4 with pool water and set it on a step so it’s stable.
- Match the bucket water level roughly to the pool water level outside.
- Mark: (1) inside bucket waterline, (2) pool waterline on tile/skimmer.
- Wait 24 hours under normal operation.
- Compare drop: pool > bucket = leak behavior; pool ≈ bucket = evaporation/splash-out likely.
Lane B: I have an autofill
Autofill is the #1 way homeowners accidentally “fail” the bucket test.
If it tops the pool off even a little, your pool mark lies to you.
- Shut the autofill off at the valve or control required
- Write down that it’s OFF (so nobody flips it back on)
- If you can’t disable it, the bucket test won’t be reliable—skip ahead to next steps for alternatives
Lane C: Pump on vs pump off
One bucket test tells you “leak vs evap.” Two bucket tests can hint at where the leak lives.
Version 1 (baseline): Run your normal schedule.
This gives the best “real life” answer first.
Version 2 (clue test): Repeat with pump OFF for 24 hours.
If pool still drops more than bucket with pump off, the leak is more likely shell/skimmer/light/fittings
than pressure-side plumbing.
Lane D: Heater / spillover / water features
Features increase evaporation (more aeration and surface area). That doesn’t “create” leaks—but it can make the water loss look scary.
Run an A/B test:
- 24 hours “normal” (your usual heater/features schedule)
- 24 hours “features OFF” (heater off + spillover/fountains off)
- Compare both to the bucket each day
If the pool beats the bucket on the “features OFF” day, treat it as leak behavior.
If the pool ≈ bucket on features-off but jumps on features-on, you’re likely seeing feature-driven evaporation (or a feature-line issue).
Lane E: Reading results (simple rules)
You don’t need micrometers. You need a clear “same vs clearly more.”
- Pool ≈ bucket: normal evaporation/splash-out is the likely explanation.
- Pool > bucket (noticeably): leak behavior—move toward diagnosis.
- Borderline: run another 24 hours, or repeat with features off and/or pump off.
Lane F: Pool dropped more than the bucket — what now?
The bucket test doesn’t tell you where the leak is. It tells you whether it’s time to stop guessing.
- Note patterns: pump on/off, stops at a specific level, wet spots, air in pump.
- Walk the equipment pad and check for slow drips (valves, unions, heater loop, filter air relief).
- If it’s consistent, book leak detection before it snowballs into deck/soil damage and water bills.
What the Bucket Test Actually Tells You
The bucket is a tiny “mini-pool” that can only lose water to evaporation.
Your pool loses water to evaporation too—plus any leak that exists.
When you run the test under the same conditions, you’re comparing:
pool loss (evap + possible leak) vs bucket loss (evap only).
Money-saving rule: If your pool drops more than the bucket over the same 24 hours, treat it as a leak until proven otherwise.
For Florida context on what “normal” can look like, see
Is My Pool Leaking or Is It Just Evaporation? (Florida Homeowner Guide).
What You Need
- A sturdy plastic bucket (a 5-gallon bucket is perfect).
- Painter’s tape, a grease pencil, or a waterproof marker.
- 24 hours (48 hours if you want extra clarity).
Optional: leak dye can help later when you’re checking skimmers, lights, and cracks—but don’t buy anything yet until the bucket test says “leak behavior.”
Step-by-Step: Set Up the Bucket Test
- Turn OFF autofill (if you have it).
- Bring the pool to normal level (mid-skimmer / your normal tile line).
- Fill the bucket ~3/4 full with pool water.
- Place the bucket on a step so it’s stable and partially submerged (this helps bucket water match pool temp).
- Match the levels so the bucket waterline is roughly even with the pool waterline outside.
- Mark both levels:
- Inside the bucket (bucket waterline)
- On the pool tile or inside the skimmer throat (pool waterline)
Quick tip: Take a photo of both marks the moment you set it up. It makes “before vs after” obvious.
Run It for 24 Hours (Normal Operation)
Keep conditions as consistent as possible:
- Same pump schedule you normally run
- Heater on/off as you normally use it
- Features (spillover/fountains) either “normal” or “off” if you’re doing the A/B version
If weather swings hard (big wind/rain front), don’t panic—just repeat on a calmer day for a cleaner read.
Measure the Drop
- After 24 hours, mark the new waterline inside the bucket.
- Mark the new pool waterline on the tile/skimmer.
- Compare the two drops (a ruler helps, but “same vs clearly more” is enough).
Don’t overthink it: You’re looking for a consistent pattern. If the pool is clearly beating the bucket, that’s your answer.
How to Interpret the Results
- Pool drop ≈ bucket drop: evaporation/splash-out is the likely culprit.
- Pool drop > bucket drop: leak behavior—move toward diagnosis.
- Borderline: repeat 24 hours with features off and/or pump off.
If you want a quick checklist for “what’s next,” jump to next steps below.
Common Bucket Test Mistakes
- Leaving autofill on: it can hide real loss.
- Short test windows: a few hours isn’t enough—aim for 24+ hours.
- Changing schedules mid-test: keep pump/heater/features consistent.
- Bucket in very different conditions: try to match the pool surface conditions as closely as possible.
- Not recording settings: write down pump/heater/features on/off so your results mean something.
What to Do If the Bucket Test Suggests a Leak
If your pool consistently drops more than the bucket (especially with features off and autofill disabled),
assume it’s a leak until proven otherwise.
- Run the pump-off version for a “zone clue” (shell/fitting vs plumbing).
- Look for wet soil, soft spots, settling, and persistent pad drips.
- If it’s consistent, schedule leak detection before it snowballs.
Start here if you want a broader self-check:
Evaporation, Splash-Out, or Leak? (How to Tell the Difference).
FAQ — Bucket Test for Pool Leaks
What is a bucket test for pool leaks?
A bucket test compares how much water your pool loses to how much water a bucket loses in the same conditions.
The bucket can only lose water to evaporation. If the pool drops significantly more than the bucket, that usually indicates a leak.
How long should I run a bucket test?
Run it for at least 24 hours. If results are borderline, run 48 hours or repeat with features off and/or pump off for a clearer pattern.
Should the pump be on or off during the bucket test?
Start with your normal schedule for the most real-world result. Then repeat with the pump off if you want clues about whether the leak is more likely shell/fittings versus circulation plumbing.
What if the pool and bucket drop about the same amount?
That typically points to evaporation and splash-out rather than a major leak. If you still suspect a leak, repeat the test during calmer weather or with features off.
What if my pool drops more than the bucket?
Treat it as leak behavior. Note pump on/off patterns, whether it stops at a specific level, and any wet spots or equipment pad drips, then move toward professional leak detection to pinpoint the source.